Suff wrote:In 1900, almost all city and short haul transport was by foot, by cycle or horse and carriage. By 1910 it was almost entirely automobile, there was an incredibly massive change.
Indeed. And in the UK at least politicians are trying to return us to the halcyon days of 1900, minus the horse.
New Highway Code guidance comes in on the 29th of Jan that prioritises pedestrians and pushbikes. Cars have to give way to pushbikes at roundabouts etc.
Suff wrote:Whilst I have my doubts about 2 years from now, I do believe 2030 will see the clear and present demise of the mass market fossil fuelled vehicles and the rise of the cheap second hand EV with good viable years left in the battery.
Well that would be nice. Because atm anyone can go out and buy a £5,000 car with years of life left in it. In at least the early days of the electric revolution you can forget that.
Yes our world is changing. Whether for better or worse, we won't know until we get there. But bearing in mind the way the ordinary person has been treated during the pandemic it is my opinion that authoritarianism is on the rise. One Tory minister has described owning a car as "outdated 20th century thinking", so make of that what you will.
What I make of it is that Joe Soap will be expected to get around on his pushbike of the proletariat or his electric scooter (oops, you just hit a pot hole and got thrown off) or on non-existent public transport.
Do we have the calibre of politician that we need to oversee this change to the brave new world?